some texas redneck posted:I saw something ages ago that still pops into my head from time to time. The rear wheels on the trailer can slide forward and back to adjust weights; it's possible for one side to be the tiniest bit misaligned from the other which means the tires are no longer rolling freely, but dragging to one side. Even a degree will shred the tread off in a very short time. In the case of your story, most likely something broke and it was more than just a LITTLE misaligned. Also possible one of his brakes had cammed over and was making it pull to the side. I'd also bet it was a Swift truck! Javid fucked around with this message at 11:40 on Jan 11, 2014 |
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# ? Jan 11, 2014 11:38 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 06:08 |
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"The adventures of Russian truckers" http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=bff_1389265887
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# ? Jan 12, 2014 03:45 |
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We have a 105km/h limit on trucks here in Ontario and I was getting laughs today at all the sneaky truckers breaking the rules because it was super foggy out. It was a free for all of trucks doing 130+km/h, driving the in the far left lane, and ignoring inspection stations.
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# ? Jan 12, 2014 09:26 |
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Yes, limited visibility, the best time to be going faster.
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# ? Jan 12, 2014 11:11 |
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Cakefool posted:Yes, limited visibility, the best time to be going faster. Most truck drivers in Canada are Eastern European, Indian and, Pakistani so they were taught to drive with a deathwish from the beginning.
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# ? Jan 12, 2014 13:44 |
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0rganDonor posted:Most truck drivers in Canada are Eastern European, Indian and, Pakistani so they were taught to drive with a deathwish from the beginning. This is the truth. Also with the 105km/h limit in place they have no way of making up lost time so by god they're going exactly 105 all the time. gently caress snowstorms, slow cars, accidents, and congestion this truck is doing 105. What a stupid rule.
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# ? Jan 12, 2014 19:22 |
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A lot of the trucks in ontario have limiters to 105km/h as well, which means its hilarious to watch one limited truck try to pass another limited truck. Takes about 10 minutes usually.
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# ? Jan 12, 2014 20:55 |
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Eh it kinds looks like they needed a new bridge anyways. http://imgur.com/gallery/KYQNg/new
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# ? Jan 14, 2014 04:48 |
God drat.
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# ? Jan 14, 2014 09:26 |
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Javid posted:
http://www.wistv.com/story/24434747/construction-equipment-hits-damages-bridge-over-upstate-interstate This is why you don't go higher than 13'6" on the far side of the USA. I'm gonna say it, that driver sure the gently caress knew how to strap a load down if he almost knocked a loving bridge over with it.
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# ? Jan 14, 2014 09:36 |
I'd lay odds they repaved the road and added ~3" without adjusting the signage.
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# ? Jan 14, 2014 09:54 |
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So normally I would say we're pretty good to the truckers we use at work. We always get them unloaded and loaded quickly, not much waiting around, and we don't damage their equipment. Until now that is. One of our guys, who until now I would have considered our best forklift operator, managed to punch a hole in the side of a trucker's trailer while unloading the empty 400lb steel tubs which one of our customers prefers to receive their parts in. It would seem when they loaded the empties onto the truck they somehow put one in at a bad angle which we weren't able to get at properly with the forklift. In the maneuvering to try to get it out of the truck a new ventilation hole was put in the side of the trailer. All I can say is I'm glad I am not involved in determining who has to pay for it.
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# ? Jan 18, 2014 05:55 |
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Holy poo poo I forgot this thread existed. Looks like I've got some back-reading to do.InterceptorV8 posted:They installed them wrong. I don't know how they installed them wrong. I mean I know HOW they installed them wrong, but it is such a rookie tire mistake that I can't loving believe it. So now that I am back home, I get to go back to a professional tire shop and have them completely dismounted from the wheels and remounted as a complete set. There's 2 different kinds of tire guy. The crazy masochists who actually enjoy that line of work and the guys who are simply too loving stupid to make decent money doing anything else. The problem is, most of the people in group A end up in a service truck so anybody you see in a shop are generally group B (or group A's who don't have a license or just don't like pulling the ridiculously long shifts you get on the road). I busted tires for 6 years, and if I hadn't developed back problems I'd probably still be doing it. Also your drives are caps right? because the problem you're describing sounds like a tread misalignment (literally they didn't roll the tread on straight at the retread plant) or casing issue. My understanding is that because the US tire industry is made up of a million different mom-n-pop shops (as opposed to us up north, basically in Western Canada we have 4 main chains of tire shops and a handful of independent guys around the hub cities) good quality control is not a prevalent thing in the retread market. It's one of the main reasons caps have such a bum rap, when at Kal we had a failure rate on our caps that was comparable to (and sometimes the same as, depending on how many group Bs were working at the retread plant on a given day) virgins. Anyways I fix trucks now (HET in a shithole drivetrain/CVIP shop), moving up in the world and all that. On paper it's not much better for my spine but when you have jacks and cranes to lift poo poo there's a lot less opportunity to do something stupid and put myself back in physio. I haven't been at it for long enough to get any really good stories yet but I'm sure that's coming.
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# ? Jan 19, 2014 17:21 |
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Here are a few photos of the trade magazine CCJ (formerly Commercial Car Journal) from 100 years ago. Cool stuff.
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# ? Jan 20, 2014 16:31 |
I used to drive 26 foot trucks (yeah I know but) and I really hated those logs. Nobody in my company took them all that seriously but they were audited earlier this year and whoa, that was some bad news. I had no idea how deep they went. Checking gas station cameras, toll cameras, mileage between stops to see if it was possible to make it, and and endless list of basic syntax bullshit. I'm glad my log wasn't one that was listed. They "only" found like two infractions with the logs they did go over but ever since then that company is subjected to insanely long inspections at weigh stations. One guy had to be fired because the fire extinguisher strap was broken and there was no windshield fluid. He had worked there 5 years! I understand regulations, I really really do. But after going through that process it seemed like it's gone way past "safety" and well into "regulations for the sake of regulation", at least by the auditors and inspection people. Omg, you mean he was checking his tires and filling up his windshield fluid during a lunch break and that can't count as a break? So the whole day is in violation? F u DOT
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# ? Jan 20, 2014 17:16 |
It is 100% about them being able to find SOMETHING to gently caress you with at any time. See also: you can refuse permission for them to look inside the cab but they can measure the thickness of your mattress (which is legally mandated) without permission.
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# ? Jan 20, 2014 20:50 |
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Javid posted:It is 100% about them being able to find SOMETHING to gently caress you with at any time. Don't forget the sleeper harness in a single bunk truck.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 05:56 |
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Any words on any more CA emissions exemptions being considered? I know theres the one time 1000 mile one but theres rumors about single owner operators [not fleets] and farmers getting a 1 truck exemption from 2014 engine requirements.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 09:49 |
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Tommychu posted:Holy poo poo I forgot this thread existed. Looks like I've got some back-reading to do. I wonder about that. Our shop gets pretty good caps, unlike the strange poo poo that you find around LA, I think they are Bandags recaps, but they are the ones that are California approved tires for the tutti-frutti CARB laws I believe. Now since you are the man with the knowledge, do they mark the recaps like they do virgins for static balance?
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 11:43 |
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Wait, CARB approved TIRES? gently caress California, seriously.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 17:36 |
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http://www.bridgestonetrucktires.com/us_eng/real/magazines/ra_v15i1/ra_industry.asp Low rolling resistance tires are required, basically.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 18:02 |
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kastein posted:Wait, CARB approved TIRES? In my dreams, I burn the CARB headquarters to the ground every night.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 18:46 |
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kastein posted:Wait, CARB approved TIRES? The big giggle is that my truck never goes into that lovely state. OK, I did a quick hop into California for a big bonus just a couple of weeks ago, and stopped counting after I got cut off 6 times in a row. I really need to figure out why my fuel mileage after service has taken a hit, but I don't have many fucks to give since they figured out how not to pay out the fuel mileage bonus anyway. If they want the truck to get better mileage, they better get better shop workers.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 20:02 |
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InterceptorV8 posted:The big giggle is that my truck never goes into that lovely state. OK, I did a quick hop into California for a big bonus just a couple of weeks ago, and stopped counting after I got cut off 6 times in a row. I really need to figure out why my fuel mileage after service has taken a hit, but I don't have many fucks to give since they figured out how not to pay out the fuel mileage bonus anyway. If they want the truck to get better mileage, they better get better shop workers. Is part of the deal that company shops pay dogshit?
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 20:43 |
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Splizwarf posted:Is part of the deal that company shops pay dogshit? I'm guessing that is also part of the issue as well. Let's cut corners so much to save money that we end up spending more money! I'm not joking when I say I have to take my truck into a real shop after our shop gets done working on it.
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# ? Jan 23, 2014 21:37 |
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InterceptorV8 posted:I'm guessing that is also part of the issue as well. Let's cut corners so much to save money that we end up spending more money! I'm not joking when I say I have to take my truck into a real shop after our shop gets done working on it. I hope the shop my dad manages isn't like that :/ "Someone in QC at Freightliner must have been having a bad day"
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# ? Jan 25, 2014 00:30 |
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MisterOblivious posted:I hope the shop my dad manages isn't like that :/ Depends if it is a real shop or a company shop I bet. It's pretty sad when I am happy that I break down near a TA and get to go to a real shop.
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# ? Jan 25, 2014 02:17 |
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InterceptorV8 posted:I wonder about that. Our shop gets pretty good caps, unlike the strange poo poo that you find around LA, I think they are Bandags recaps, but they are the ones that are California approved tires for the tutti-frutti CARB laws I believe. Now since you are the man with the knowledge, do they mark the recaps like they do virgins for static balance? Bandag was bought by Bridgestone a couple years ago and is now in direct competition with MRT (Michelin's retread division), and they're both pushing the quality really hard as a result. They won't actually sell you bulk tread anymore unless you've got their specific equipment, which is increasingly automated (the coolest bits being the casing analyzers, which create a vacuum around the tire and watch how the casing reacts to find separations or air pockets). Anyways, balance on a cap is a pretty tricky business. They're not marked, but initially the high spot (red mark on a virgin) and heavy spot (yellow) are generally both at the seam of the tread on a cap. In theory, standard procedure for us was to mount them so that the seam on the outer is 180 degrees from the seam on the inner, though in practice ~98% of the time our caps were uniform enough we didn't have to bother unless we knew a driver ran bobtail or high speed/light load a lot or had a princess-and-the-pea level of sensitivity (which is why I suggested you probably have a bad one on there somewhere, it should never make a truck handle like Michael J. Fox is driving no matter how they're mounted). If they hit the end of the roll at the wrong time though, you'll end up with 2 seams on a tire. Not necessarily a bad thing, you just use the midpoint between the 2 seams as your heavy spot. But notice I said initially. For the first 3-400 miles (more or less depending on speed/load) the freshly cured rubber breaks in with the rubber that's already had a full tread's worth of miles put on (or 2, 3... I've seen a casing run as many as 7 lives though it's rare to see more than 3). When they finally start to jive with each other your high spot, if it wasn't too severe, has probably stayed at the same spot but settled down a bit and your heavy spot could have moved anywhere on the tire. If a driver/company was dead set on having a set of caps spun on a balancer we'd insist they run a good trip or two and come back. As far as your issue goes though, you're on the right track taking it to a known competent shop anyway. I was always fond of the 'jackstand cruise' method, jacking all the drives up and running the truck up to a fairly low speed to look for runout. The safety risks inherent to "driving" a stationary vehicle means some guys and/or their managers don't like that method though. If the tires are confirmed to roll straight the next place I'd look would be to see if they were mounted with water in them- this is a double whammy of dipshittery as it wrecks the wheel (and if they're steel it makes it 10x harder for the next guy) and makes your poo poo shake like a 5 year old on pepsi and pop rocks. I once had a beer trailer that had so much water in the tires that the vibration was ruining the product.
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# ? Jan 25, 2014 22:07 |
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Tommychu posted:Bandag was bought by Bridgestone a couple years ago and is now in direct competition with MRT (Michelin's retread division), and they're both pushing the quality really hard as a result. They won't actually sell you bulk tread anymore unless you've got their specific equipment, which is increasingly automated (the coolest bits being the casing analyzers, which create a vacuum around the tire and watch how the casing reacts to find separations or air pockets). So help me god if I find out they put loving golf balls inside the tire or something.
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# ? Jan 25, 2014 23:47 |
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InterceptorV8 posted:So help me god if I find out they put loving golf balls inside the tire or something.
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# ? Jan 26, 2014 01:20 |
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CannonFodder posted:Aren't the CounterAct balance beads just tiny golf balls, in essence? The density of a golf ball isn't ideal, and they bounce around too much. The range of speed where they do more good than harm is very narrow. Beads work well enough until you have to clean them out to patch a hole (if any of them are hanging out around the beads of the tire when you air up it can cause separations- and they love to stick to the lube. there's a reason you're supposed to toss the whole bag in without opening it). A few of my customers have tried those rings that bolt between the wheel and drum (which are ball bearings set in fluid) and feedback was good until it got cold as poo poo and the fluid started freezing/gelling up on them. They have new one with a thinner silicone fluid that doesn't freeze though.
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# ? Jan 26, 2014 01:49 |
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How do you mount a tire with water in it? Is this a matter of not drying your compressed air or are you saying people pull unmounted tires out of the rain and just chuck them on?
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# ? Jan 26, 2014 11:32 |
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IIRC, it's what it sounds like - they intentionally add liquid (50/50 water/antifreeze, I think?) to help balance the wheel/tire instead of using weights. There's some involving how much liquid should actually be added, I'm not even going to pretend to know how much liquid you put in or how it manages to work, but I'd imagine it would ruin the inside of the tire in a hurry.
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# ? Jan 26, 2014 12:35 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:How do you mount a tire with water in it? Is this a matter of not drying your compressed air or are you saying people pull unmounted tires out of the rain and just chuck them on?
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# ? Jan 26, 2014 14:51 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:How do you mount a tire with water in it? Is this a matter of not drying your compressed air or are you saying people pull unmounted tires out of the rain and just chuck them on? Google maps satellite of my old shop: Bear in mind those are all stacked 10-12 high. And that's the smallest commercial shop in the city. It's also the perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes. There's just enough water, it's nice and warm but still shady inside a tire. Turbo Fondant fucked around with this message at 18:07 on Jan 26, 2014 |
# ? Jan 26, 2014 17:54 |
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Tommychu posted:Yeah I'm talking about mounting a tire with rainwater/snow/ice in it, not removing it out of pure laziness. Retreaded tires are generally stocked in quantities that are too large for indoor storage. Some of our guys would mount tires full right to the bead, some would even leave the ice in if they were frozen. Or if road service, the spares on the backs of trucks collect all kinds of poo poo.
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# ? Jan 26, 2014 20:59 |
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InterceptorV8 posted:Or if road service, the spares on the backs of trucks collect all kinds of poo poo. Oh gently caress does that ever get nasty. Canadian companies tend not to use spare racks though, you see 'em infrequently on trailers (usually trailers from the mid-late '90s) but never on a tractor. I've only used a truck spare twice (both were on Swift units, we took care of all their calls in western Canada). First was in the middle of winter and it took me more time to clean the ice and road grime/gravel out of the tire than the whole rest of the call took. And trailer spares if present were usually twice as hosed as the tire I was taking off anyway. I never left the shop on a call night without at least a cheap 22.5 cap in the back of my truck. Goddamn, recalling all this poo poo after nearly 2 years out of it and pursuing another career has got me wanting to do a 'stories from the tire biz' thread, like all those GBS 'stories from my job' threads from around 04-06 before GBS was a shitpile. I miss the tire business to the point where I look forward to running over nails and wearing a set out, cause it means I can go back to the old shop (though only a couple of guys from the old crew are left, high turnover rates are inherent to the business). I think I'll be drafting a couple up in Word when I get time, and if I like the result and nobody says it's a bad idea for an AI thread I'll make it happen.
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# ? Jan 27, 2014 00:47 |
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Thanks. I just hear the ads and had no idea how they actually work.Snowdens Secret posted:How do you mount a tire with water in it? Is this a matter of not drying your compressed air or are you saying people pull unmounted tires out of the rain and just chuck them on? Tommychu posted:Goddamn, recalling all this poo poo after nearly 2 years out of it and pursuing another career has got me wanting to do a 'stories from the tire biz' thread, like all those GBS 'stories from my job' threads from around 04-06 before GBS was a shitpile. I miss the tire business to the point where I look forward to running over nails and wearing a set out, cause it means I can go back to the old shop (though only a couple of guys from the old crew are left, high turnover rates are inherent to the business). I think I'll be drafting a couple up in Word when I get time, and if I like the result and nobody says it's a bad idea for an AI thread I'll make it happen. CannonFodder fucked around with this message at 19:56 on Jan 27, 2014 |
# ? Jan 27, 2014 19:51 |
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Tommychu posted:Goddamn, recalling all this poo poo after nearly 2 years out of it and pursuing another career has got me wanting to do a 'stories from the tire biz' thread, like all those GBS 'stories from my job' threads from around 04-06 before GBS was a shitpile. I miss the tire business to the point where I look forward to running over nails and wearing a set out, cause it means I can go back to the old shop (though only a couple of guys from the old crew are left, high turnover rates are inherent to the business). I think I'll be drafting a couple up in Word when I get time, and if I like the result and nobody says it's a bad idea for an AI thread I'll make it happen. Definitely, I love that type of thread. Plus, the best part of working a lovely job is having the stories to tell later.
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# ? Jan 28, 2014 04:55 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 06:08 |
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Tommychu posted:Oh gently caress does that ever get nasty. Canadian companies tend not to use spare racks though, you see 'em infrequently on trailers (usually trailers from the mid-late '90s) but never on a tractor. I've only used a truck spare twice (both were on Swift units, we took care of all their calls in western Canada). First was in the middle of winter and it took me more time to clean the ice and road grime/gravel out of the tire than the whole rest of the call took. And trailer spares if present were usually twice as hosed as the tire I was taking off anyway. I never left the shop on a call night without at least a cheap 22.5 cap in the back of my truck. Post the poo poo anywhere, I'm sure you've seen some poo poo too. Had to call out the wrenchmobile tonight, gator bit me and ate my airlines right out of my brake chambers. Best part was my company trying to get me to tell them a cross street, in the middle of butt-gently caress nowhere Nevada.
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# ? Jan 28, 2014 07:10 |